I should have mentioned that our stack bounding paper also discusses using
the stack tool to drive function inlining.  This is cool because it can
reduce stack memory consumption by a fair amount relative to other
inlining policies such as nesC's heuristics, no inlining, and maximal
inlining.

Also, while we don't want to spread the stack tool around too widely until
it's more polished, it currently works very well on most TinyOS kernels
and if anyone's interested in being an early adopter I can give you the
code.

John Regehr

_______________________________________________
Tinyos-users mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://mail.Millennium.Berkeley.EDU/mailman/listinfo/tinyos-users

Reply via email to